You’re practicing for next year when you join Dive the Titanic, an incredible journey to the
bottom of the sea that will bring you face-to-bow with the most famous shipwreck of all time.

Oh, wait. This just in: you don’t need to actually hold your breath to visit it. You’ll be in a
specially designed titanium-and-carbon-fiber submersible craft. Also, we forgot to time you. So just breathe
normally now while you continue reading.

First, know this up front: this trip will set you back about $105,000. Which, okay, sounds like a lot for an
eight-day trip. But once you consider that the most expensive tickets on the ship’s original 1912 passage
would be more than $70,000 in today’s dollars, it’s... okay, still pretty expensive.

Still, you will be doing something that only a handful of folks have ever done—in fact, more people have
walked on the moon than have visited this underwater graveyard. The bragging rights alone are worth the
price.

Your trip will start in St. John’s Bay, Newfoundland. From there, you’ll be shuttled by helicopter or
seaplane to the support yacht, and then head to the precise location in the North Atlantic. You’ll spend
some time familiarizing yourself with the trip, talking diving with researchers and crew, maybe learning how
to assist with the sonar. After you arrive, and when the weather conditions are just so, you’ll board a
submarine craft and plummet 4,000 meters, glide over the ship’s deck, poke around the famous staircase and
become humbled by man’s hubris.

But do keep an eye out for any Heart of the Ocean necklaces you may come across.